A Breakdown of the 71 People Killed by Police in Florida in 2015

In hindsight, 2015 was the year America began a long, hard discussion about police-involved deaths. Already a tough and heated conversation, the talk was made all the more difficult by the realization that no one — not the federal government, not an NGO, not a single journalistic institution — had ever kept a reliable database of police-involved shootings. That made it impossible to compare the events of this year against historical trends.

However, the Washington Post and the Guardian undertook the duty of collecting data on deaths during encounters with law enforcement officers. The main difference is that the Post collected data only on shootings, while the Guardian included all deaths, including those caused by Tasers.

There are some notable findings for Miami-Dade: The county had by far the most police-involved deaths, with 15 last year. The county with the next highest number was Jacksonville, with just six. The Miami-Dade Police Department led the state in deaths, with seven tied to department officers, while the City of Miami was third, with three.

Statewide, black suspects were killed more often than anyone else, making up 45 percent of all police-involved deaths. African-Americans make up just 17 percent of Florida's population. (Whites, meanwhile, compose 60 percent of the population but just 44 percent of deaths.)

Here's a more detailed breakdown via the database:

Total number of people killed by police in Florida: 71

Rank by Total Number of Deaths: 3rd Rank by Deaths per Capita: 24th

Weapons

Total number unarmed: 14 (24%) Total number armed with a firearm: 39 (51%) Total number armed with a knife: 6 (8%) Total number armed with another weapon: 12 (17%)

Weapons cited as "other": A razor blade, a "stick or crowbar," a machete, cars, a pipe, a "sharp object," a samurai sword, and a broomstick.

Notably, deaths of blacks after police encounters is higher than the national rate of 7.1 per million. Deaths of Hispanics/Latinos is noticeably lower than the national average of 3.5 per million. The rate for whites is similar to the national average of 2.9 per million.